SCIENTIFIC TO ‘COUNTRY DOCTOR’ WORLD FAY TRIBUTE Fifty years ago a group of doctors @athered in Berlin to hear an obscure little scientist tell how he had isolat- | ed a disease germ and had learned how to cultivate it for study. Dr. Robert Koch had been a coun- Try doctor in East Prussia, and to the scientists he addressed he must have seemed a backwoodsman. But Dr. Koch had brought his proofs to show he had discovered | the dread germ of tuberculosis. Also, he revealed that he could make the germ grow in an artificial medium. Almost overnight he became a greater figure in Paris than Pasteur, and last week—on the fiftieth anni- ve! and bacteriologists the world over paid tribute to his genius. Those | an fighting tuberculosis still use meth- ods of the experiment of Koch. Dr. Koch died in Berlin in 1910, Dr. Koch never cared for honors and died in such poverty that a founda- tion had to be provided to keep his family from want. Since the discovery, the ravages of this disease have been reduced to +ome-fourth of what they then were. SCIENCE FINDS NEW METHODS TO TREAT PERNICIOUS ANEMIA Developement of a new treatment “for pernicious anemia which has produced “startling” results is an- of his discovery-—physicians | ELECTRIFYING THE | FARM NOTES. | Inauguration of another | step in the advancement of the Penn- | hours. sylvania Railroad's electrification For | and improvement program between | Washington, Batimore, Philadelphia | {and New York has been announced. | Work will ; : | The total cost of the entire pro- | jeet, including iastallation of exten- ! sive new cable lines, will be approx- ‘imately $7,000,000 and the work of laying the conduit alone will require approximately 1,000 men at its peak, exception of 1830 which ran Practice cleanliness with utmost 300 more for the year than the pres- care | ent report for 1931. Use good judgment in all Cancer steps into second place as it was announced M. W. Clement, | assured | this alad vice president in charge of the opera- will be — | Soom is arcally ie Ba tion. | —There is no m or | the previous year, and in both cases More than 100 miles of conduit are ' ghout pullets. Slow- is slightly lower than 1930. included in the project, which is an growing pullets that are not ready HY was third in mortality important preliminary step to actual to lay until they are eight or ten activities, showng a total number of work on the electrification of the months old are a dead loss and 9470 for the past year. As a cause | Pennsylvania lines from Wilmington should not be tolerated, of death pneumonia has stood high through Baltimore to Washington. with good and strong pullets and in the lists for the past ten years, The work will get under way im- hens that are physically fit to lay reaching @ total of over 14,000 in | mediately and it will be pushed to eggs and have the feed necessary to 1923. The year just closed is about | completion by the first of the next make the eggs there will be a mar- on a par with 1927 and 1930, running | year. | gin of profit from eggs this next less than a hundred in excess of each Construction of the new conduit winter.—R. B. Thompson, in the of those years. line will complete tne underground Oklahoma Farmer-Stockman. | Bright's disease continued to be a installation or the railroad company’s — large enemy of human life. The fig- entire system of telegraph, telephone, | Turning stock on the pasture be- ures as announced are 9035 for the and signal wires for a aistance of fore the grass has a well-established | year, It has not been so low in any | 225 miles from New York to Wash- top and root growth may damage the year since 1923, and is about a thous- ington. Over its heavy traffic lines, pasture and reduce the season's total and fewer than 1928, 1929 or 1930. where interruption of communica- feed from it. | This does not indicate any particular tions or the failure of a signal fof | — diminution of the activity of this dis- instant might complicate the —Scenting pigs with kerosene is | ease. Since the early variations over | operation of trains and cause serious suggested as a means of inducing a a period of ten years time, show it | delays, it has been the policy of the sow to adopt the young of fothers. sometimes below that mark. The | Pennsylvania railroad to place its past three years have been above communications system underground In the form of butter, milk fat that line, while the present one falls and thus avoid danger from weather is easily digested, is unequaled in slightly below. hazards or any interference from the concentrated energy value, palatabil- Apoplexy stands fifth in the list, as | overhead power system in electrified ity, flavor, and vitamin content, a cause of death. The figures stand territory. | claim students of nutrition. at 8132 for the year. This is the The conduit consists of six ducts’ — | lowest since 1923, and is the ninth in which the various wire systems The most important apple in- straight year to record between eight will be installed. These include the sects, a revised edition of Farmers’ and nine thousand deaths from this railroad’s important communications Bulletin No. 1270-F, just issued, may | cause, The variations ars so slight as system and the signal system, gov- be obtained free from the Depart- | to indicate that the ravages of this erning the operation of all trains. ment of Agriculture, Washington. | malady are practically stationary in This signal system, operated by re- — | the Commonwealth. These five iseases account for and your success with baby chicks a “killer” for 1931. The number who | ~Manure, or other forms of or-. ganic matter, will greatly improve about 60,000 deaths in the State in | garden soils. Apply eagerly enough | 1931, or about half the total number. for straw material to decay. Plow | mounted by Dr. A. C. Bachmeyer, Mote control through sub-stations lo- superintendent of Cincinnati General cated approximately every ten miles, “Hospital. i sets the automatic signals which de- Dr. Bachmeyer said experiments | termine the movement of every train, “have produced the “most satisfac-| Carrying 108 strands of wire in Spade deeply and thoroughly. Then INTERESTING FACTS, tory BO no matter to what the communication cable, the new | apply fertilizer broadcast and work | “acts moi " Stage the disease hus progrouses | telegraph and signal system will re- into the soll. A 4-12-4 mixture js| AMO ia Knows, Pernicious anemia is caused hy a 9uire more than 11,000 miles of £00d on a farm garden with sum. compiled from all parts of the world shortage of red corpuscles in the blood. A series of experiments have been started in General Hospital by the department of internal medicine | designed for treatment of pernicious anemia, Dr. Bachmeyer said in a statement. i “The treatment is beyond the ex-| permental stage and the startling results obtained will soon be releas- ed to the medical profession and eventually to the general public,” he ‘said. | Experiments conducted by four | physicians, were based on an earlier very that beef, digested by nor- | gastric juice and fed to an ane- | mic patient, increased production of | _red corpuscles. However, if the beef had been digested by gastric juice | Trom an anemic sufferer, there was | no increase in red corpuscles. Working on this premise, scien- “tists found, it was said, that proper- ly neutralized gastric juice could he injected into the veins of the patient, | producing an apparent increase in blood cells, Bv isolating the active agent in this ivice, the effect was said to be multiplied. Pernicious anemia can be far more effectively treated with a new liver extract than hy feeding unpalatable raw liver. This liver concentrate solution has been develoved by Dr. William P. Murnhv, distineuished Harvard Med- ical School scientist. with the assist- ance of a vounger scientist, at the "Peter Brigham Hosnital, Boston. Dr. Murphv describes the nature of the new remedv and some re- markahle reenlte obtained hv its use, | in the current issue of the Journal of the American Medica! Associa- | tion, He wns one of the nioneers of the ravr Yivar treatment for perni-| ‘cious anemia in 1924, i POWERS GREAT i « Injections of the new liver con- centrate are made in the patient's muscles. The extract is seventeen times as notent in its curative effect a8 the hest calf liver itself. It is ‘more than seven times as mowerful as anv other Yivar rancentrate so far known, according to Dr. Murphy's Tenort. In same cnges two or three intra- mnscunlar indectiops resulted in re- voverey Marked improvement was moticaa¥ia within 38 to 48 hours after fhe first infection. ANTERVALS ARE LONG It is not necessary to give these ‘injections every day. In most cases of pernicious anemta, all that is nec- | . wssary is to give Injections at in- tervals of one to three or more weeks. ‘Perhaps the most interesting as- relatt pect of the Murphy liver concentrate treatment is that it can be used to replace blood transfusions in the «case of gravely ill patients. Several types of blood diseases ‘can be treated by the extract, ex- periments made on some thirty pa- tients indicate. AONEY AND MILK SIMPLE | BUT SURE COLD REMEDY Warm milk and honey at bedtime | will induce sleep in the grown gen- ., °." .."rone now in existence) is lege last year it requircd 5.63 man have the slightest symptom of a wold. Magistrate—“You sav this man ‘stole vour watch. Do I understand that vou prefer the charge against Him?” Wurphv—“Well, no, your worship; “X prefer the watch, if it's all the same to you” + | mington and W wire for the installation between Wil- | clent manure, while a 4-8-4 is better . This enor- | with little or no manure. mous cable will have a capacity of | Sores 135 telephone and telegraph mes-| -—Providing low f roosts for sages humming along simultaneously chicks as early as 8 to 4 weeks of | through its copper strands. lage will help to préveiit coccidiosis, | Following completion of each sec-' Say State College poultry specialists, tiin of the conduit system, the ca- Furthermore, chicks will feather and bles will be installed as rapidly as Brow more uniformly if forced to possible. It is expected that the en- roost at an early age, tire project can be completed next ue year. | Runners root in June — taking | or early July are several times more | productive than the later ones which set in late’ August and | An early start is important. Fispare Special trains, carrying mixers and cars of material for manufacturing concrete on the ground, will be to speed the work along. i ! the soil Patren—'"May I have some sta- conveyors on these concrete trains soil early and se lants i | yionery ” “Who is that fellow with the long will feed the concrete direct from APril. A sidedressing of st of | Hotel Clerk (haughtily)—*Are you | hair?” the mixer to the excavations. | ammonia or nitrate is in giv-| 4 cuest of the house?” “He's a fellow from Yale’ fe se tase und gi Ut HS Patron—*Heck, no. Im paying| “Oh, I've often heard of those MAIL PLANE PILOT | a i dollars a day.” Yale locks. CRASHED TO DEATH | —Record kee on milk produc == kin | tion of dairy cows becomes of great Mail pilot Forrest Mallick, 24 er importance as: years old, gambled his life against Detective work should the weather, last Thursday, and lost. And it was not in the mountainous losers are definitely t stretch of Pennsylvania which face- “out they go” should: en tious writers have dubbed “Hell's Acre,” but on the flat expanses of —Be sure to rake off the mulch on Ohio that he crashed to his. death. shrubbery borders and flower beds | Mallick, flying the night mail from before active growth: starts. If this | New York to Cleveland, fell in a is left on too long it softens the | farmer's field near Bedford, Clewe- plants. De not remove’ the mulch on land suburb, where he ran into a a bright sunny day. blinding fog, rain and snow. | — g 1,000 pounds of mail, B __gyulphate of ammonia and ni- left the Newark, N. J. airport at trate plate are the two most Mo 10:15 p. m., or Wednesday. Shorty erally used fertilizers for fruit trees. after midnight he arrived ar Belle- They should be applied at least 2 or fonte, Pa. He: climbed out of his ship 3 weeks before blooming for best re- a ask about the weather the rest of | gyuits. Broadcast the fertilizer around way. tree halfw He was told it was thickening but tne ends of the Branches i Lowers he had flown the night mail on the the trunk and an equal distance out | New York-Cleveland run for eight beyond the spread of branches. fouls 2nd decided he could. make it — throug | brooder should At 2:30 a. m., only half an. hour A er a signs i) from the end of the run, he was re- damp litter first weeks ported over the airport at Parkman; kar the =~ | it is practical to rood Ohio. A few jugs lates Be Jan jie i a prastics) to Clean ihe E RY a ma its engine * ? ce Of pheans, and similar crops, Bedford and nearby towns. Several gnown om AE field hours later, his body was found in| Sonny: troubies encountered im the w of his plane. small gardem will disappear feet from ceiling time to use ; Corps; Vice-Admirals rate Lieutenant | General; Rear Admiral compares to | - Major General; Commodore (though| In an experiment at State Col- | the same standing as Brigadier Gen- | hours and 4.64 tractor hours an acre ranks | to grow 89 acres of corn with tractor “Tho the days be dark and trade | The Lieutenant in the Navy is On phe tough, it's always well to make a Fos Aging Te Ape ig s Cap- | bluff, to face the world with cheer- | | tain, while the grade Lieuten- | fy] eye, as though the goose were ant in the Navy is of the rank as hanging high."—Walt Mason. ny First Lieutenant. and | Second Lieutenants rank alike, as do | Midshipmen and cadets. Some men have reasons to advance | for their failure, but on the other ‘hand, if they were successful there | —We will do your job work right would be none. i ' x n Cook Electrically by Collier's weekly, the editors [iikariicn te Sst plane to/the tollow, More than 2,000 different articles are now plated with chromium. What is the largest palace in the world? The Vatican, with 11,000 rooms. Human skin is so antiseptic that it kills 90 per cent of all disease germs that land on it. Any ordinary suit of men's cloth- ing is made up of a 130 different pieces of ; i : : ie : 2 g 8 i, g and the hardwood floors attract the admiraton of all who tarry under his roof. He was a careful workman, at- tested by the fact that he has many | of the original tools purchased when | he first started to work. | Andrew Johnson and Miss Almeda | Jones were united in marriage July 4, 1888. at the First Methodist church in Camden, N. J. One son, | Oscar, prominent citizen and lodge- man of Tyrone, blessed their union. Mr, Johnson has been active in the church, having been a member of the First Methodist church of Port Matilda for 45 years, much of which time he served in practically all official capacities. Mrs. Johnson, | who is the president of the Ladies Aid society, was a teacher in the | Sunday school for many years. Ye has been vitally. interested in | community affairs, and served many years as president of the school board. He was a member of the old Tyrone division safety committee for three terms. As a fraternal man, he has been equally as active as in other things. He is a charter member of the Knights of the Golden Eagle and of the Junior Order United American Mechanics, of Port Matis, ad has the honor of being a cer, having passed through all chairs in each. He is a life member of Tyrone Lodge No. 494, Free and Accepted Masons, and of Harrisburg Consist- ory. He also holds membership in Jaffa Temple, Altoona, and in the Tyrone Hook and Ladder company of volunteer firemen. Mr, and Mrs. Johnson look for- of which will be spen tilda where their life been. man has Mother—'‘Mabel's Have La ing om m YF amer— ot a word. I have not even seen him since I mailed him Jast month's electric light bill’ ’ lll ...You can buy a Good Range cheapnow!| are available to all, ARE YOU RENTING? IF SO, and you move your electric range — well, on the average, it only costs about $7.50 for rein- | a stallation in another home on West Penn lines. Hil i! il . PURCHASE an electric range Now if 4 Pieces ~—while you can still buy at the il. ’s most favorable prices in years— | “Wear-Ever from ANY DEALER and you will ELECTRIC SUPPLY C0., HOSTERMAN & STOVER, - - Bellefonte Large ovens...with automatic time and tem- | perature controls. Super-speedy heating elements I Hl on the platform. Every 1932 refinement... built into the finest and most beautiful porcelain en- i amel models that have ever been offered. And yet... prices have been lowered as much i as 509, —the greatest reductions of all time! ll What is more, the cost of electric cooking on | West Penn lines is so low that its advantages Bellefonte Millheim WEST PENN ELECTRIC SHOPS - State College factory but in a shipyard. rugh ¢WILSON'S 5° HARLIE, the hired man, hunted for the liniment. og Nell ra limpi in. It was dar on Pe A floor, but Charlie struck a match and found the bottle, tossing the charred match-en aside. Before he had i i Farm 2 AND FOR SMOKERS, COLDS, sincers, speakers WILSON'’S 5Rops DROPS of Honey, Horehound Menthol . . . 3€ Good Printing A SPECIALTY at the Employers, This Interests Yot The Workman's Compensation Law went into effect Jan. 1, 1916. Tt makes umiiiants: SO Pulser: e specialise plac- ready Aare Plants and recommend Prevention Safe Guards which Reduce Insurance rates. It will be to your interest to’ consult us before placing your Insurance. JOHN F. GRAY & SON State College Bellefonte MODERN OMEN NOT SUFFER monthly pain and delay dur fk 5 ve oye